BAGHDAD (AP) — In a Baghdad workshop plastered with black-and-white photos from a more peaceful time, Mahmoud Abdulnabi hand-carves a wooden oud, a string instrument with ancient roots that has fallen silent in much of the war-torn country. The Islamic State group has banned music in the third of Iraq under its control, but in Baghdad a growing number of musicians and other artists are defying the extremists, hoping to revive a rich culture smothered by decades of war. "In Iraq there is renewed interest in oud and other high-caliber music since the war, but this effort is still in the very beginning," said Bassam Salim, an expert oud player and teacher in Baghdad. At Abdulnabi's shop, on the top floor of a building in a historic neighborhood, prices range from $300 to several thousand dollars. The group runs a school in the former Nigerian Embassy at which children study music, art, poetry and even traditional etiquette.